Recent News

A new article with grad student Elyza Pilatowski-Herzing as first author now published at Molecular Microbiology. Link

In a nice start to 2024, we have just been awarded a 5-year, $2.8 million NIH R35 grant. See here for details

Another Nature Microbiology paper for Catherine Badel -  her analysis of the chromosome architecture of an archaeon that lacks SMC proteins has just been published.




Bell Lab - Archaeal Chromosome Biology

The lab investigates the machineries that duplicate, express, organize and segregate the genome. To ensure viability, all cells must perform these processes in a timely and accurate manner. We exploit a multi-disciplinary range of cell and molecular biological, biochemical, genetic and structural approaches to determine the mechanistic and regulatory parameters that govern these essential cellular processes. Our work is driven by the evolutionary conservation of these fundamental machineries, allowing us to exploit archaea of the genus Sulfolobus as simple and robust model organisms.


Chromosome Biology

DNA Replication

Chromosome

architecture

Cell division